Sources
Paleolithic & Neolithic Life
Geography & Environment
Early Civilizations
Innovation & Adaptation
100

What is a primary source?

A source created during the time of the event (e.g., diary, artifact)

100

What does “domestication” mean and how did it help?

Taming animals for use; it supported permanent settlements

100

What is absolute location?

A specific spot on Earth using coordinates or address

100

Name one early civilization and its river

Egypt – Nile, Mesopotamia – Tigris & Euphrates, etc

100

What is innovation?

Creating new ideas, methods, or products to solve problems

200

Give one example of a secondary source.

Textbook, encyclopedia, biography

200

Name one way Paleolithic people got their food.

Hunting, fishing, or gathering

200

What are two ways humans interact with the environment?

Modify, Adapt, or Depend (any two)

200

[Daily Double] What are the 5 characteristics of civilization?

Advanced cities, specialized workers, record keeping, advanced technology, complex institutions

200

Why was irrigation important to a River Valley Civilization?

It helped control water for farming/agriculture

300

Why are primary sources important to historians?

They offer firsthand accounts of historical events

300

Why did Paleolithic people live in small nomadic groups?

They followed animal herds and searched for food sources

300

Name one common geographic feature shared by early civilizations.

Rivers (e.g., Nile, Tigris, Indus, Huang He)

300

Describe how irrigation helped civilizations grow

Provided water for crops → food surplus → population growth

300

What is mud brick making and why was it useful?

Making building material from mud; used for homes and cities

400

What is one way to identify a primary source?

It was created by someone present at the event (e.g., personal journal)

400

What key development marked the Neolithic Revolution?

The shift from food gathering to food producing (farming)

400

What is terrace farming and where was it used?

Creating flat fields to farm on sloped hills; used in Ancient China

400

What major changes occurred when humans moved from small agrarian/pastoral societies to complex civilizations?

People developed governments, economies, religion, and cities; populations grew; labor became specialized; and technology advanced (e.g., irrigation, tools)


400

What environmental problem led to terrace farming?

Lack of flat land for farming on hills/mountains

500

Which is more reliable for understanding an event: a painting from the time or a textbook from 100 years later? Why?

The painting; it's a firsthand perspective (though both may be biased)

500

What is specialization of labor and how did it start?  

When people performed specific jobs besides farming due to food surpluses

500

How did humans change their environment during the Neolithic Era?

Built irrigation canals, cleared land, made tools, domesticated animals

500

How were agrarian and pastoral societies different in how they lived?

Settled vs. nomadic

500

How did early civilizations adapt to unreliable access to water?

Built irrigation systems and canals